Notebooks reveal personal side of Rex Brandt
Young Chang
Rex Brandt’s contribution to the California art world started in the
humble pages of his personal notebooks. Ink sketches done in quick
strokes. Watercolor drafts deliberately incomplete. Notes in writing,
done in pencil and ink, with words crossed out.
He filled a book every year, starting with his high school days, until
his death in March at age 85. The pages tell the history of this late
Newport Beach artist
Today, almost 20 of the notebooks -- with pages worn with age -- are
enclosed in glass. The books and more than 50 of Brandt’s paintings are
displayed in the Grand Salon of the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum as
part of the “Wind, Water & Light, The Legacy of Rex Brandt” exhibit.
“It’s a highlight,” said Marcus de Chevrieux, the museum’s curator.
“It’s something that has never been seen before -- [his] personal, visual
diaries.”
The notebooks were made available by the Brandt family. Their
inclusion in the exhibit, the first since the artist’s passing, is a hint
of Brandt’s intimate relationship with his city.
He created the Newport Beach seal in 1957 and co-founded the
Brandt-Dike School of Painting in Corona del Mar with Phil Dike in the
late 1940s. He also brought attention to the local area on a national
scale.
During the 1930s and ‘40s, such East Coast painters as Thomas Hart
Benton and Grant Wood fueled the American scene painting movement.
From Southern California, from the quiet work he did in his notebooks,
Brandt brought attention to the West Coast while pioneering the
California scene painting movement.
“He was a Corona del Mar artist,” said G. Wayne Eggleston, the
museum’s executive director. “He was really fascinated by the sunlight,
the water and along the coast -- particularly between Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach.”
The beaches back then looked different from today. Land was largely
undeveloped and wild flowers bloomed in the spring, while the hills
turned a golden hue in the summer, Eggleston said.
With all the ordinary things that make up a beach -- boats, jetties,
sails, fisherman, rocks, waves, cliffs, caves and sea gulls -- Brandt
produced not-so-ordinary art of his surroundings.
Next to one of his paintings, an oil on canvas titled “First Lift of
the Sea,” a quote from him hangs on the wall: “To me, a boat is just
another object until that delicious moment when it enters the water and
commences to dip and dance with life. Movement is the reality of the
vessel.”
Many of the exhibited works are accompanied by such quotes. De
Chevrieux said they come from sources including Brandt’s published books
on watercolor techniques and his personal notebooks.
Eggleston’s favorite piece is called “Low Tide, Laguna Beach.” It is
scene with hazy figures of people, sand and water.
“To me, you can tell that the sand is wet,” Eggleston said. “On many
of his paintings, if you look at them, you can smell the ocean. You can
touch the ocean. You can see the ocean. All the human senses are there.”
Many of these ocean scenes are set in Newport Beach.
One of Brandt’s most famous paintings is titled “Pavilion and Bay.”
Next to it, Brandt is quoted: “There is no Balboa Bay on any map or
chart. It is bigger than all the varied islands, post offices and
channels which comprise the City of Newport Beach. It is a feeling shared
in all the parts and as difficult to define as love.”
FYI
WHAT: “Wind, Water & Light, the Legacy of Rex Brandt”
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays through Feb. 28.
WHERE: The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum, aboard the Pride of
Newport, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 673-7863
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